%I #16 Sep 08 2022 08:45:34
%S 59,131,251,419,971,1091,1259,1571,1811,1931,1979,2099,2411,2579,2819,
%T 2939,3251,3491,3659,3779,4091,4259,4451,4931,5099,5171,5939,6011,
%U 6131,6299,6779,6971,7019,7451,7691,8291,8699,8819,9371,9491,9539
%N Primes of the form 24x^2+35y^2.
%C Discriminant=-3360. See A139827 for more information.
%H Vincenzo Librandi and Ray Chandler, <a href="/A139994/b139994.txt">Table of n, a(n) for n = 1..10000</a> [First 1000 terms from Vincenzo Librandi]
%H N. J. A. Sloane et al., <a href="https://oeis.org/wiki/Binary_Quadratic_Forms_and_OEIS">Binary Quadratic Forms and OEIS</a> (Index to related sequences, programs, references)
%F The primes are congruent to {59, 131, 251, 299, 419, 731} (mod 840).
%t QuadPrimes2[24, 0, 35, 10000] (* see A106856 *)
%o (Magma) [p: p in PrimesUpTo(12000) | p mod 840 in [59, 131, 251, 299, 419, 731]]; // _Vincenzo Librandi_, Aug 03 2012
%K nonn,easy
%O 1,1
%A _T. D. Noe_, May 02 2008